The first Quaker to sit in the Commons, Pease was described by a contemporary as ‘one of the most useful, though not one of the most shining, members in the house’.
At the 1832 general election Pease offered as a Liberal for Durham South. Although his decision to stand was partly a response to the difficulties his family had faced in forcing the Stockton and Darlington railway bill through parliament, his father was initially opposed to his candidature, though once he had been assured of ‘the absolute purity and sincerity’ of his son’s motives, he reluctantly acquiesced.
An assiduous attender, Pease was described by the parliamentary reporter James Grant in 1837 as:
the most punctual and close of any man I ever saw. He even beats Mr Hume himself. From the beginning of the business till the adjournment, no matter how late the hour, there he is, not indeed in any particular seat, but in some part or other of the house, all attention to what is going on.
Grant, Random recollections, 301-2.
He generally divided with Grey’s ministry on most major issues, but ‘he was not so uniformly in the same lobby as the government, for instance in divisions on minor questions’.
Pease spoke frequently in the Commons, and, in accordance with his faith, did not use honorary titles when addressing his fellow members. His style was described as:
... correct, but plain. In his manner there is no action whatever. ... His voice is weak, which, with his great rapidity of utterance, often renders him inaudible.
Grant, Random recollections, 302.
Although he rarely spoke on ‘major subjects’, his early speeches reflected his continuing support for agricultural protection.
At the 1835 general election Pease was re-elected without opposition. He divided with the opposition majority on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and for the amendment to the address, 24 Feb. 1835. He voted for Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835, the issue which forced the collapse of Peel’s short-lived ministry, and thereafter consistently supported the attempts of the Melbourne ministry to reform the Irish church. He also loyally backed the government’s foreign policy, opposing the critical motion on the ministry’s handling of the Canadian rebellion, 7 Mar. 1838, and, surprisingly given his pacifist beliefs, voting for war with China, 9 Apr. 1840.
His interventions in debate continued to reflect personal interests. He successfully carried the animal cruelty bill (5 & 6 Will. 4, c. 49) which outlawed cock-fighting and bear-baiting, 14 July 1835, a piece of legislation that was ‘symptomatic of a broad consensus on questions of moral reform’ among evangelical Dissenters and liberal Anglicans.
Returned without a contest at the 1837 general election, Pease appeared ‘much thinner, and much more sallow in his complexion, than when he entered the house’.
The continued assiduity of his attendance, alongside the demands of his commercial interests, ‘had a marked effect upon [Pease’s] health and spirits’ and there was little surprise when he retired at the dissolution in 1841, stressing the ‘fatigues and responsibilities of my present position’.
Pease’s vast commercial network, which employed nearly ten thousand men in collieries, quarries and ironstone mines in south Durham and north Yorkshire, and his concerns in the Middlesbrough estate, remained the main focus of his energies, though he was an active philanthropist, and acted as president of the Peace Society from 1860.
Pease died at his Darlington home, Southend, from heart disease in February 1872, leaving estate valued at under £350,000.
